I read that, now let me comment:
Quote:
Pretrial Services as a concept was initially set up in New York to help in order to help the judges get a better handle on which of the people who were arrested had extensive histories of criminal activity.
Pre-Trial was originally a privately funded project called the Vera Institute, not a public bureaucracy. Further, it was originated because individuals were in jail awaiting bail for longer amounts of time than they would have received if they were convicted. The judiciary had the opportunity to release these individuals after it became obvious that they were not going to make bail, but failed to do so. Police have never been responsible to compile data in addition to the original incident that they are involved in, that job belongs to the prosecutor's office. The police agencies that do contribute to the National Crime Statistics is because they receive federal funding to do so.
Quote:
The New York courts had also received numerous complaints and lawsuits claiming the courts were against poor people and there was no statistical data to prove the actual need to keep bails high. Pretrail Services was a great compromise to provide that proof.
The issue was not that bail was excessive, it was that the defendants had significant criminal history and their families were through with helping them. Regardless of the bail amount, it was their choice to continue to break the law that put them there, not any actions of the court. Pre-Trial stepped in and assumed that after interviewing the defendant, that they would know more about the needs of the defendant than the defendant's own family, who has dealt with the defendant's issues the entire time.
The remainder of the article I agree with. I feel that anyone that receives government assistance should be required to pass a drug test in order to receive their check, why should we pay for their drug issues? Around here, if you read the court dockets for individuals on Pre-Trial supervision, which incidentally is like an ATM machine that they put their thumb print on and have little to no personal contact with any P&P agent, nothing happens when they are violated. I can show the same for drug courts where the same individual violated his conditions 5-6 times before bein g removed from the program. Nothing occurred as a penalty for any of the offenses.
Just my input,
Scott